đ $SOL ETFs unlikely to be approved in US âanytime soonâ
ICYMI, Sol Strategies announced that it was investing CAD $25 million ($17.4 million) in the Solana ecosystem earlier this week.
CEO Leah Wald told me ahead of the new year that Sol Strategies was focused on building up the ânext levelâ of its business strategy.
Obviously, given Solâs focus, the firm is gonna be bullish on the ecosystem, but Wald noted how pleasantly surprised she was at the amount of developer activity and overall enthusiasm for Solana right now.
She is skeptical, however, about a solana ETF being approved in the US âanytime soon.â
âI think thereâs quite a while until a SOL ETF gets approved. During that time, as a former issuer, I know that you have a long time where youâre working with the staff and youâre working on education. That gives [potential issuers] a yearâŚto educate the staff and make sure that everybodyâs up to speed on what you know SOL actually is, and the merits and benefits, and provideâŚthat additional timeline for maturity,â she explained.
But she does think that Canada is likely to approve a SOL ETF from 3iQ before we see a slew of US products because the Canadian issuer is âalways ahead of the US.â
Out of curiosity, and given Waldâs experience, I pushed her on why she thinks a potentially crypto-friendly regulator wouldnât look to get an ETF that holds SOL out the door. She told me part of her reasoning was exactly because of the changing leadership at the SEC.
If the new SEC chair âcame in and said, âokay, all crypto ETFs are approved overnight,â I think that thatâs dangerous, actually,â she explained. It would be better to see a regulator whoâs willing to put in the work to understand the differences between something like Solana and Ripple and speak to potential issuers prior to just greenlighting ETFs.